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Full text of "Daily Racing Form: n. Sunday, July 19, 1896"

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VOL. II. NO. 99 



PRICE, 5 CTS 



CHICAGO, SUNDAY AND MONDAY, JULY 19-20, 1896. 



RACING GOSSIP. 

Indiana law is more intricate than that based 
on the Scotch and English borderland about the 
Cheviot foothills. Let us go to the common- 
sense of Indiana racing and Indiana law. The 
Sellers bill invited racing enterprise. It wasn’t 
one of yours “trooly rooral” acts framed out of 
reforming and agricultural instinct. It came on 
the end of a season of experience and legalized 
forty-five racing days per annum for every race 
track within the state. The Indiana tracks— 
grouped on the edges of Chicago— for business 
reasons — took life under the law. Instead of 
violating, they have gone to extremes in support 
of the Sellers law. Judge Gillette’s decision en- 
couraged them. It was a commonsensible 
ruling. Now the Indiana Supreme Court has 
killed it. The decision leaves the standing of 
the tracks legal, but in the open— for the shots 
of Indiana officialism and what not. Officialism 
thereabouts has its angles. Judge McCabe’s 
Friday ruling was, as racing rulings al- 
ways are — superficially thick witted. Its 
decisive vitals gave the reason of grouped book- 
-makers and officials for the conclusion that 
iliere was au illegal racing combination and 
that Lakeside, Sheffield and Forsyth were vir- 
tually one track and should be so considered 
under the Sellers law. Lower court superficial- 
ity is funny. The higher it goes the more legal 
humor grades off. Judge McCabe furnishes 
Americans a legal lesson through the contrast 
of legal error. Had he told racing people that 
his reason for turning over the Gillette decision 
was grounded on a combination of operators 
and an incident division of profits, that portion 
of the public with “its eye on the gun’’ might 
have thought the decision intelligently wrong. 
But Judge McCabe’s stated reasons for nailing 
Judge Gillette to the legal cross are just what 
they should not be and one can well sustain a 
strenuous movement against such a law. Good 
law demands the support of every good citizen 
of every town and every state. Bad law — 
whether born out of ignorance or interest should 
be legally opposed. The McCabe decision will 
not do and should be keenly opposed. 

Jimmie Rowe, an excellent judge, says that 
“Requital is the best we have and the best we 
ever saw. He can gallop as fast as the rest of 
them can run. This is big verbosity, consider- 
ing that Prince Lief and Ben Brush are both 
good three-year-olds — where are the rest?— and 
that Requital is likely to meet them in the 
Brooklyn $7,000 Special next mouth. Both 
Brush and Lief will be entered in that race— 
which deserves all that is best. Handspring is 
sure too. Jim Murphy will also put his grand 
filly, Souffle, into the race. She’s easily the 
best of the western three-year-old fillies of 1896, 
and, to my notion, better than anything in her 
line that the east can produce. Certainly Inter- 
mission is not within eight or ten pounds of her. 
The Brooklyn Special ought to furnish us one 
of your races with a frame of sentiment and be- 
fore and after comment. We need more of that 
kind. 

One of the keenest judges of Eastern racing— 
^^las been in his eye since the Washington 
meeting began, he sent the news of Requital’s 
Realization trial, writes me as follows ; 

“Our Eastern two-year-olds are a lot of in-and 
outers and your colt Ornament impressed me as 
the best of them. When he first came to Grave- 
send, he was thin and showed the effect of his 
hard campaign, but he has freshened up and put 
on a lot of flesh. Don d’Oro is a counterfeit and 
Winged Foot is the best of the fillies. The Friar 
has speed enough to beat anybody’s horse 
and can outwork hades and its extras in the 
morning. But with the colors up, he seems to 



lose heart. He is a soft looking chestnut in 
color, with a light mane and tail. 

It’s of my opinion that Mr. Belmont will not 
send his stable abroad this fall. Navarre is laid 
up with a splint; Margrave’s ailing leg has 
given way; Hastings is sf>re in the shoulders 
and the Blemton two-year-olds are rank disap- 
pointments. He had a good prospect of a hard 
stable to beat when he said he would go to Eng- 
land. but how “the scene changed.” 

I’ll send you something about the Futurity in 
a day or two.’’ 

Daily Racing Form told the story of Requit- 
al’s try out for the Realization. It alone pointed 
to him as the winner. He was a natural 1 to 5 
favorite, yet even money was laid against him. 
Our news came from an experienced racing man 
and an official of the Jockey Club. More of the 
same kind will be printed from time to time on 
the eve of the great events. 

The test in the Realization was a good one, 
for the pace was hot from the drop of the flag 
to the last quarter pole, where Hastings and his 
stable companion died away, while Requital 
romped along to the winning post quite at his 
ease. The crowd that gathered around his box 
in the cooling-out paddock after the race saw a 
colt that was remarkably free from distress. He 
scarcely appeared to take a long breath, and he 
snatched eagerly at the wist of hay that Trainer 
Rowe offered to him. 

Dave Gideon said after the race and a look of 
the colt he once owned : 

“He looks as though he would be ready to go 
it again in twenty minutes.’’ 

Unlike many of the fastest horses in training. 
Requital is without a blemish or an out of any 
sort. His legs are as clean as a hound’s tooth, 
and until he was taken sick with catarrhal 
fever last spring he had never missed a feed. 
His sickness early in the season prevented him 
from filling any of his early engagements, and 
it was only by exercising the greatest care and 
discretion that Rowe succeeded in getting the 
colt ready tor Saturday’s big race. Having 
come out of the Realization without ill effects 
he should now train on and improve still 
further. If he does so it goes without saying 
that the best of the other three-year-olds will 
find him a hard customer to handle in the big 
race for colts of his age at the bheepshead Bay 
meeting in the autumn. 

Every admirer of a high class horse regretted 
to see the poor showing made by Hastings in 
the Realization. The fast colt was not himself, 
and there are many experienced followers of 
the turf who doubt whether he will again this 
season be in condition to show the sterling 
good stuff that is undoubtedly in him. In ad- 
dition to the shoulder soreness, his pasterns 
are ailing, and he is tar from being in shape to 
do himself justice in a distance race. With 
Henry of Navarre temporarily in the hands of 
the veterinarian, Hastings out of form and the 
once promising Don de Oro a dissappointment, 
the*stable which Mr. Belmont intends to ship 
to England next fall is in a rather bad way. 

Though he's hard on one, there isn’t a much 
better judge of a racehorse than Ed Corrigan 
In his hands Moylan has been one of the best of 
the Western “lower middle class’’ of late- 
better than he would have been in Byron Mc- 
Clelland’s stable. 

In Indio Mr. Corrigan probably has a really 
shifty colt. He paid $1,700 for the son of Maxim 
and Ira by Doncaster. Green Morris was his 
tout at the Simeon G. Reed sale. The ex-sage 
of Gravesend is in line on Rancho del Paso pro- 
duct. Some of it is turned over to him for 
action. Star Ruby is an instance. At the same 



sale Morris got Midlight for $700 and Thorn 
Blossom for $900. It was Jimmy McCormick, 
for Burns & Waterhouse, that made Corrigan 
pay the price for Indio, who, by the way, was 
named before sale. 

The bookmaker who “hollers’’ should be dis- 
ciplined by the organization with which he is 
doing business. There has been a recent case 
or two in point at the Indiana tracks. The 
scourge has been applied with good results. 
The odds-layers of every ring have a “shade’’ 
and deserve it. The “shade” is the result of 
labor, intelligence and expenditure for informa- 
tion. That is purely trade information. 
When they assume that form, as they “figure” 
it, is bad because it goes awry, the miss— from 
no matter what cause— is not an occasion for a 
public clamor. This is especially true when the 
stable, from which the bad performance comes, 
is of good class. The present state of things in 
the east came chiefly from bookmaking declar- 
ations. Such clamor is generally and naturally 
accepted as more than ordinarily authoritative. 
Without the turf what would the bookmaker 
be? The scandal and noise of interest that 
comes from any and every ring is indecent and 
damaging. Racing officials, w'ith their “eye on 
the gun” are justified in taking sharp action 
against the “barkers.” 

John McCafferty’s Winged Foot is a filly, and 
no filly but The Butterflies has ever won the Fu- 
turity. What happened in 1894 though, may 
occur in 1896. Only sexual infirmities handicap 
the softer sex of the turf. Yorkville Belle was a 
good third to His Highness and Huron (who 
was disqualified), in 1891 and Lady Violet— a 
sDoed wonder— about as good a second to Mo- 
rello in 1892, when the race was first run over 
the present Futurity course of 1263 1-3 yards. 
Winged Foot’s being kept busy nowadays. She’s 
well engaged and the making of turf hay while 
the racing sun shines is common since and Mc- 
Caffertyism. The filly is out of Longshore, a 
good racing mare in her day and comes by 
her quality in natural lines, even though the 
Eastern idea of the dead Buchanan was and is 
that he liked half a miles and the mud. It is 
not likely that Winged Foot— turf noble though 
she is— will win the Futurity. I rather think 
that Ornament will land the rich stake. The 
Order colt’s inclined to be cranky and all that ; 
but he is a great colt — by far the best of the 
West — and the Futurity course— straight and 
broad— is his kind. Then again, his owner is a 
sensible and painstaking man, and Ornament’s 
crankiness will grow less. Horse speed and 
quality is a sharp mark of intelligence. W’hen 
the horse and the owner are both equipped men- 
tally there are deep probabilities in sight. 




Brigrhton Handicap Weights. 



New York. July 18.— Secretary C. V. Sass of 
the Brighton Beach Racing Association has an- 
nounced the weights assigned to the various 
entries for the Brighton Handicap, at a mile and 
a quarter, to be run on the opening day of the 
summer meeting at the Beach— Wednesday of 
next week. The list of eligibles, with their 
weights, is as follows; 

Henry of Navarre, 134; Clifford, 128; St Max- 
im, 120; Sir Walter, 114; Keenan, 112; Requital, 
110; Ben Brush, 110; Nanki Pooh, 109; Margrave, 
108; Patrician, 108; Belmar, 103; Senator Grady, 
102 ; Paladin, 100 ; Dutch Skater, 98 ; Emma C, 96 ; 
The Swain, 9ii ; Premier, 90 ; Sapelo, 85, 



SUNNY REVIVES AND WINS. 

The wet weather and the likelihood of a heavy 
track caused numerous scratchings at Lakeside 
yesterday, but the rain did not dampen the 
ardor of the crowd, and the attendance was up 
to Saturday’s average. 

Backers had the best of it as three out and out 
favorites won, and in the third race The Kitten 
and Rapier were equally well fancied. 

The principal event of the day was a handi- 
cap at seven and a half furlongs. It was robbed 
of its interest by the scratching of Assignee, In- 
gomar. Simmons and Sunny, and only four went 
to the post. Doctor G and Nikita were the 
favorites. They got off at the first attempt. 
Doctor G being bumped into. Dockstader and 
Nikita raced together in front all the way to 
the head of the stand, where Dockstader drew 
away and won handily. Doctor G was last. 

In the mile and a sixteenth race Redskin was 
the favorite, but the weight proved too much 
for the old horse. Sunny went out to the front 
at once and made a runaway race of it. Redskin 
keeping within striking distance for half a mile. 
From this the three-year-old drew right away 
and won in a gallop with Laugdon second. 
Sunny’s popularity has not waned at Lakeside, 
and his victory was cheered. 

A dozen very moderate ones went to the post 
in the first race, and Mary L was a mild favor- 
ite. Off fourth, she led all the way, and just 
managed to beat out Ida Wagner. 

Sutton was scratched in the two-ycar-old race, 
and Siegfried was the choice. Doctor Harris 
led for a quarter of a mile, then Siegfried and 
Brown Girl went to the front. In the stretch 
they were joined by Miss Paine, and a driving 
finish took place, Siegfried getting home first, 
with Brown Girl s cond. 

In the third race there was nothing to *chooes 
in the betting between The Kitten and Rapier. 
Ethelleah and The Kitten made the running, 
the latter winning easily at the end, while 
Ethelleah just beat Ropier for the place. 

Ingomar was the selected one in the last race, 
with Simmons next in demand. Off third, In- 
gomar went to the front and he and Jennie 
June ran together to the stretch, where Ingomar 
came away and won at his leisure. John Hickey 
who was last to the head of the stretch came 
fast at the finish, and got third place. 

Mural, a three-year-old filly described as being 
by Darebin— Mura, was entered in the last race. 
This filly is an outlaw, having raced at St. 
Asaph, and the judges refused to allow her to 
start. Her owner said he had bought her from a 
party who claimed she was not the outlawed 
Mural, If she is not then her pedigree must be 
wrong. 

Eakins Has Gone Wrong*. 



Nrw York, July 18.— It is now reported that 
none of the horses belonging to David Gideon 
can be got ready to race until late in the fall, 
if indeed they are in shape to start at all this 
season. The Iroquois- Carlotta colt that nine 
out of ten horse-men looked upon last fall as 
the probable winner of the Futurity of 1896, has 
been turned out for the season by Trainer Joy- 
ner, and all hope of landing the richest of 
American turf events has been abandoned. The 
colt, it will be remembered, worked faster than 
any yearling seen hereabouts in his trial last 
fall, beating the fast horse Waltzer at even 
weights in a sprint of three furlongs. He was 
most highly thought of until he was taken sick 
last spring, and even then Owner-trainer J. J. 
Joyn. r hoped to see him round to in time for the 
big t\.*o-year-old race of the year. 



RACING FORM. 



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CINCINNATI OFFICE— 408-410 Vine St. 

J. R. Hawley, Agent. 
On Sale at Noon. 



CHICAGO, JULY 19-20, 1896. 



NOTES OF THE TURF. 



Rayon d’Or died last Friday in Kentucky. 

Inquirendo was an extremely lame horse .after 
his last win at Aqueduct. 

The Commoner is on the shelf with a bowed 
tendon of the near front leg. 

T. H. Cooke has purchased from Dr. Lean the 
three-year-old colt A mericus, by Bishop. 

The horses of Dr. McLean, Including Loki, 
will be shipped to Detroit after the close at 
Latonia. 

Applegate has again gone lame, and the 
chances are he will not be able to start before 
late in the fall. 

At the recent Coney Island meeting $131,820 
was distributed, John McCafferty via Winged 
Foot led the owners winning list with $22,825. 
Then followed the Brookdale Stable $20,340; 
Blemton Stable $15,475, and C. T. Patterson 
$11,930. 

The foreign book at Latonia is shouting 
through punishment over the Ryan & Co. play. 
The local statement of the same account isn’t 
against Ryan. 

LAKESIDE FORM. 



The form of Monday’s Lakeside fields is: 
First Race— Ragner, Pinchbeck, Hesperia. 
Second Race— Pife, Alert, Lady Juliet. 

Third Race— Urania, May Fern, Virgie Dixon, 
Fourth Race— Sullro.ss, Dockstader, Miss 
Frances. 

Fifth Race — Caufield, Millie M, Fritzie. 

Sixth Race — Cora Havill, Outgo, Queen Bess. 



ST. LOUIS FORM. 



St. Louis. Mo., July 18.— The form of Mon- 
day’s Fair Grounds fields is : 

First Race — Ethel Gray, Mrs. Bradshaw, Lu- 
cetta. 

Second Race— Henry Young, St. Pancras, Wal- 
nut Ridge. 

Third Race — Towerst, Hickok. Metairie. 

Fourth Race— Aquinas, Goshen, Jack B B. 

Fifth Race— Harry McCouch, Bertha, Our 
Maggie. 

Sixth Race— Bing Binger, Figaro, Linda. 



MILWAUKEE FORM. 



Milwaukee, Wis., July 18.— The form of 
Monday’s State Park fields is as follows: 

First Race— Wernberg, Whiff, Trilby. 

Second Race— King’s Ctmnsel, Banquo II, 
Scarborough. 

Third Race— Buckwa, Springtime, Uncle Jim. 
Fourth Race — Wernberg or Kamsin. Orinda, 
Sweet Faverdale. 

Fifth Race— Belle Boyd, La Verne, Minnie W. 



LATONIA FORM. 



Cincinnati, O., July 18.— The form of Mon- 
day’s Latonia fields is as follows : 

First Race— Hotspur, Fretful, Loyalty. 

Second Race— St. Helena. Sam Tate, Good Ad- 
vice. 

Third Race— Salsetta, Truelight, Thanet. 

Fourth Race— John Havlin, Black Silk, Pro- 
basco. 

Fifth Race — Irby B. Robair, Gid Law. 

Sixth Race — King Charlie, Lufra. Santa Maria 



AQUEDUCT FORM. 



New York, July 18.— The form of Monday’s 
Queen’s County JocLey Club fields is: 

First Race- Morpheus, Sirocco, Crimea. 
Second Race— Sir Francis, The Dragon, Sue 
Kittie. 

Third Race — Sir Moitke, Joe Hayman, EdnaD. 
Fourth Race- Royal H, Marshall, Mirage. 
Fifth Race — Our Jimmy, Sunny Slope, Doom- 
ful. 

Sixth Race— Lambent. Defender, Helen H II. 
Seventh Race— Woodbird, Motorman, Joe 
Cutley. 

AQUEDUCT POOLING. 



Louisville, Ky., July 18.— To-night’s pooling 
on Monday’s Aqueduct races was : 

Second Race — Sir Francis, $10: The Dragon, 
$8; Sue Kittie, $7 ; field, 5. 

Third Race— Ellerdie, $10; Sir Moitke, $8; Joe 
Hayman, $6; Edna D, 5; Sanguine, $4; field, $3. 

Fourth Race— Marshall, $15; R yal H, $8; Tel- 
egram, $S: Mirage, $6; Buckeye, $3. 

Fifth Race— Sunny Slope, $10 ; Our Johnny, $8 ; 
Myrtle L, $8; Maud Adams, $5; field, $5. 

Sixth Race — Premier, $15; The Native, $10; 
Lambent, $8 ; Defender, $5, King T, $4 ; Helen 
H, $3 ; Honolulu, $3. 

Seventh Race — Woodbird, $10; Joe Cutley, $6; 
L B, $5 ; Olivia L, $4 ; field, $3. 



AQUEDUCT ENTRIES. 

Probabilities : Weather clear ; track fast. 
First Race— 5-8 Mile. 

3-vear-olds and upward. Selling. 

[nd. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

835 Irvana (3) 94 2254 F. Hubbard (3) 94 

844 (himea (3) 94 2277 Hermia (3) 96 

2377 Marsian (4) — 100 1.587 Burgundy (4) .. 108 

2277 Sirocco (a) 108 838 Dreibund (4) . . .107 

1440 RightR’yal (3). 97 2380 Tombola (3) — 102 

2282 Hergen (3) 106 Morpheus (6) ..118 

2190 Bon Ami (3) ... .105 761 Fannie B (4) ... 103 

2351 Map. Prince(3) .101 

Second Race— 1 1-16 Miles. 
3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

^nd. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt, 

(2378)Sue Kittie(4).. 97 (2231)The Dragon(3) 97 

2302 (ffiugnut (3) 81 (2254)Helen H 11(3). 81 

2304 Defender (3) .. ., 94 (2302)Sir Francis(6)109 
Third Race -5-8 Mile. 

2-year-oids. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt ind. Horses Wgt 

2375 Second Chance. 95 2375 Edna D 95 

2249 Joe Haymnu ... 9.5 2301 Ellerdie 95 

2346 Sir Moitke 98 2249 Sanguine 98 

1822 Kicksy Winsy..l02 

Fourth Race— 1 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling, 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2378 Mirage (4) 112 2347 Marshall (6). ..110 

2349 Buckeye (4) — 101 (2308) Telegram (3).. 91 
(2376) Royal H (3)... 91 

Fifth Race— 5-8 Mile. 

2-year-olds. Maidens, Allowances. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2379 Our Johnny.. ..105 2379 Loch Glyn 105 

1460 The Manxman. 105 2379 Tempestuous ..105 

1413 Rossifer 105 1442 Doomful 105 

(2379) Sunny Slope ..109 2305 Myrtle L 109 

2346 Donny 102 2379 Maud Adams.. 102 

Sixth Race— 1 Mile. 

3-year-olds. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2351 The Native 107 2376 Lambent 107 

2351 KingT 107 2377 Premier 107 

2376 Honolulu 104 (2.:54)Helen H il ...102 

2304 Defender 112 

Seventh Race— 5-8 Mile. 

2-year-old Maidens. Allowances. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Ho» es. Wgt. 

2307 Olivia L 102 2346 LB 102 

2^107 Woodbird 102 2316 American Girl. 102 

2375 BonniejEloise. ..102 812 Sedgewick 102 

2346 Motorman 105 2379 Joe Cutley 105 

2379 Robbie W 105 2379 One Chance 109 



ST. LOUIS ENTRIES. 



Probabilities: Weather clear : track fast. 
First Race— 3-4 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2340 Agatine (3) 98 1732 Lucetta (3) 98 

1342 Fredouia (3).... 98 2173 Baal (lad (4)... 98 
1772 Bettie Hill (3) . . 98 2284 Contract (5)... 109 
Ethel Grey (a). 109 2365 MrsBr’dsh’w(4)109 
1756 Jennie Wren f5)109 20(6 Aunt Susie (4) 107 
58 Hop Bloom (4). 107 1451 Fay. Belle (4). 107 

1706 Signora (4) 107 2343 M. Griffin (4) . . .107 

2344 S. Woodford (4). 107 

Second Race— 7-8 ^dile 
3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2285 St Pancras (a). .109 9.57 Henry Youug(6)109 

2243 J’hn B Ewiug(3) 95 2284 Bravo (3) 95 

2340 W ’nut Ridge (.3) 95 2247 Utopia (3) 95 

2309 Rob Roy 11 (3).. 95 2247 Fasig (3) 95 

2206 Roosevelt (4)... 107 2243 Brahma (5) .106 

2284 Denver (a) 106 2111 Jovial (4) 104 

2244 Little Biily(4) . .104G2247 Immilda (6)... .104 
335 Leasomau (3) .. 98 

Third Race— 1 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling, 
ind. Horses. W’gt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2344 J. Bradley (4) . . Iu5 2222 Towerst (3) . . . , 99 

2285 Royal Ch’ic»^(3) 95 2341 Cochina (3) 95 

2343 Hickok (3) 92 2110 Metairie (3) 82 

Fourth Raco— 5-8 Mile. 
2-year-olds. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

2310 Uncle Pat 102 2288 Sea Robber 102 

2366 Omah W’ood 101 2288 Forsythe 101 

12368) Aquinas 101 2221 Scorcher 99 

2283 Glad Eyes 104 1636 Goshen 104 

(2283) Gold Top 1U4 2288 H. S. Tobacco. 104 

2368 Jack B B 107 2310 Goose Liver...lU6 

1829 NineFifty Three 103 

Filth Race— 1 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. W’gt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

(2311)Bertha (3) 90 1753 Cutaway (3) ... 95 

2.344 H. McCouch(3).I06 (2092) E’ron tier (3)... 99 
(2247)Charles P (a) .107 (2343)Our Maggie(6)105 
Sixth Race— 1 Mlie and 70 Yards. 
3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 

Ind. Horses. W gt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2246 Figaro (5) 112 2204 Don Carillo (3) 86 

(2312)Devault (3)... 94 (2287) Bing Binger(3) 94 
2313 Leader Ban (6) 104 2287 Linda (6) 99 

LATONIA ENTRIES. 

Probabilities— Weather clear ; track fast. 
First Race— 7-8 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

2319 Marion Star(5) 109 2359 Koko (6) 106 

2359 Hotspur (a) 103 1937 Volley Fuse (5) 103 

2161 Rupee t4) 101 1424 Uncle Henry (4)98 

2^59 Doorga C) 99 2358 Ken.Thatcher(3)96 

2335 War Song (3). .. 95 2.335 Fretful (3) S3 

2335 HotStuff(3) ... 93 2335 Loyalty (3) 89 

2289 Liberati (3) 89 2293 Miss S (3) 87 

1995 Nana (4) 87 

Sfeconu Race — 3-4 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

Lorena Sayre(3)105 2258 Jurist (4) 105 

1860 Sam Tate (4) . . .105 2289 Cuidado (3) . . . . 102 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. St. V4 




Str.Fin, 


Jockeys 


Owners 


Op 


( 


2:118 ETON JACKET 


109 y, 2 


1*/* 


U 


D 


Cassin 


T. P. Hayes 


1 


2 


2274 OVERFLOW 


97 1 


4* 


41 


2*/, 


T. Burns 


Ohio Stable 


3 


5 


2156 VITE 


90 3 


2*/, 2 kk 31 


T. (’harles 


L. Ezell 


4 


2 


2274 IZEYL 


100 4 


3h 


31 


4*/, 


E. Jones 


Pelham Stable 


6 


6 


2315 CONVERT 


90 8 


6 


5^ 51 


A. Barrett 


LeamingtouFarm 15 


10 


2226 EL LADRONE 


99 5 


7 


7 


6 


Beauchamp.J. Atkins 


6 


8 


773 BARNEY ADLER 


96 7 


8 


8 


7 


Burck 


J. W. Levy 


20 


20 


15‘28 OUTING 


94 6 


52 


6 


8 


Dunn 


Bryn Mawr Stbl. 


10 


20 


2318 SNAG 


90 9 


9 


9 


9 


O’Brien 


P. J. Miles 


15 


25 



MILWAUKEE, WTS., July 18.— Nineteenth day. 
Club. W’eather clear; track good. 



MILWAUKEE FORM CHART. 

Midsummer Meeting of the State Park Jockey 



Presiding Judge, Col. R. W. Simmons. Starter, C. Fitzgerald. 



2370 



FIRST RACE- 1-3 Mile. 2-year-olds. Selling. 



4-5 
2 
4 
3 
8 
8 

... 8 

Time, 24U, 37, 49‘/j. 

Winner — Ch. f, by W’histle Jacket— Reply. 

Post 6 minutes. Start good. Won easily; place driving; third all out. Overflow ran an 
honest race. Vite was speedy early part but tired at end. Izeyl ran well. Convert also. 



2371 



SECOND RACE— 3-4 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



Ind. Horses. 



W t. St. Vi ^ Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



2225 TIM MURPHY 94 4 I/2 Ul/aU D 

(2276) DOUBLE QUICK 100 5 52 4 ^k 31^21 

2275 IRENE WOODS 99 1« 2i 2iyi2i 3i 

2084 GOODWIN II 111 2 3h 52 52 4h 

2198 CAMPANIA 100 3 4i 3 k 4« 51 

CAVESPRING 104 7 7 7 6 6 

(2140)SPAGHET'ri 108 6 6 6 7 7 



Op Cl PI 



BeauchampWhite & Clarke 3 4 7-5 

McHugh Oots Bros. 4 10 4 

T. Burns Leamington Farm 3-2 7-5 1-2 
E. Jones Burns&VVaterhouse3 2*4 1 

Burck Five Point Stable 6 10 4 

Freeman J. A. Lynch 10 15 6 

McGlone Chas, Boyle 10 15 6 



Time, 2,5. 49?i. 1:14*4 
Winner— (’h. g, a, by Kyrle Daly— Maggie R. 

Post 4 minutes. Start good. Won easily; place driving; third all out. Double Quick showed 
remarkable speed. Irene Woods tired badly. Goodwin ran a bad race. Cavespring had a little 
left at end. 

Scratched— Spokena, 91 ; Trilby. 103; Guard, 104; Alamo, 104; Excuse, 92; Tommie Rutter, 104; 
Senator Morrill. 105. 



2372 



THIRD RACE — I 1-8 Miles. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. St. 


*4 V 2 


M 


Str.Fin. 


Jockeys 


Owners 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


2331 PEPPER 


106 


2 


31 41 


;iH 


3i^1nk 


McHugh 


Louis Ezell 


1 


4-5 


out 


2330 SUNBURST 


106 


r 


2kk 31 


21 


2h 254 


Freeman 


J. E. Cushing 


2 


2*/, 


4-5 


23;10 UN(^LE JIM 


lOJ 


4 


11 Ink 


IH 


IH 33 


T. Burns 


Thos. Hums 


6 


4 


8-5 


214:1 SANDOVAL 


104 


6 


4*/, 5 


5*/4 4*/4 42 


Coady 


C. Porter <fe Co. 


12 


15 


6 


2330 PEYTONIA 


108 


1 


6 6 


6 


5*/, 51 


McGlone 


Clyde Stable 


20 


20 


8 


1.591 MISS PERKINS 


98 


3 


5 2kk 4 % 6 6 


A. Barrett 


J. W. Levy 


20 


20 


8 



Time, 26*4, 55/,, 1 :19*4, 1 :44*4, 1 :57?4. 

Winner — Br. c, 4, by Hindoo — Francesca. 

Post 4 minutes. Start good. Won in a mild drive ; place same; third handily. Uncle Jim 
ran well and tired last furlong. Miss Perkins showed a little speed. Peytonia was interfered wih 
on first turn. 

FOURTH RACE— 1 1-16 Miles. 3-year-old and upward. Pfister Hotel Handicap. 



2373 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. 


St. 


H 




U 


Str.Firi. Joekeys 


Owners 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


(2330) KAMSIN 


106 


5 


5 


5 


3* 


1*4 liVi McHugh 


L. Ezell 


3 


4 


7-5 


(2063)S. FAVERDALE 


93 


3 


24 


41 


44 


48 2« E. Jones 


B’rns<fe yVaterho’se 


6 


6 


2 


2170 ORINDA 


97 


4 


41 


IH 


Ink 


2*4 34 T. Burns 


T. Licalzi 


3 


2*/4 


4-5 


2264 MUSKALONGE 


105 


1 


IN 


2*/4 2»« 


3*4 410 Freeman 


F. M. Arrhur 


6-5 


8-5 


:i-5 


2317 LORD NELSON 


107 


2 


3« 


3h 


5 


5 5 McGlone 


C. Boyle 


5 


5 


2 



Time. 25*/2, 5194,1 :16^. 1 :4!*4, 1 :48‘/,. 

Winner— Br. c, 3, by Blazes— Miss Hall. 

Post 5 minutes. Start good Won driving ; place cleverly ; third handily. Kamsin interfered 
with at starf, E. .Jones came near causing some trouble last eighth with E'averdale. Orinda tired 
badly last furlong. Nelson outrun. 

Scratched— Havoc, U9. 



2374 



FIETH RACE— I Mile. 3-year-olds and upwards. Allowances. 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. 


St. 




*/s 


% Str.Fin, 


. Jockeys 


Owners 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


2198 RAINMAKER 


112 


3 


4i 


41 


4Vi 4‘-’ 


13 


McHugh 


Providence Stable 8-5 


2 


4-5 


2261 SAMSON 


109 


2 


21 


1» 


11*41h 


2 % 


Morgan 


H. Hanson 


6 


7 


2*4 


2276 ELWYN 


96 


5 


3nk 


3« 


21 */s2« 


314 


E. Jones 


Scoggan Bros. 


4 


5 


2 


2316 PRINCE 


109 


4 


51 


51 


3h 3h 


45 


T. Burns 


R. R. Rice 


24 


2 


4-5 


2276 HINDA 


107 


7 


7 


7 


6 6 


51 


Freeman 


G. G, Moshier 


4 


m 


1 


2414 MONTEPENSO 


114 


6 


6 


6 


7 7 


6 


H WilliamsAlpine Stable 


20 


20 


8 


2314 NEL. OSBORNE 


107 


1 


Ink 


21 


5*4 5 


7 


McGlone 


Pelham Stable 


20 


20 


8 








Time, 27. .5:iJ^, 1:18^4. 1 -44. 











Winner — (ffi. c. 4, by Falsetto — Phillipa. 

Post 3 minutes. St irt good. Won handily ; place driving to the limit ; third easily. SamsOn 
ran well for three quarters but seemed to tire at end. Elvvyn caught the complaint from him. 
Scratched— B. F. Fly Jr., 111. 



Arrack (3) 102 1910 Buckwe (3) 97 

2289 G. Advice (3)... 97 Rella H (.1).... 97 

2289 Kankakee (3)... 97 23.58 ('. Young (3) ... 97 
2358 G. Montrose(3). 97 2358 St. Helena (3).. 97 

23.35 Buffet (4) 97 22.58 Mesh (3) 97 

2337 Parson (3) 97 2358 Hafiz (3) 97 

1815 M. Reveu’gh (3) 95 2217 Masse (3) 95 

Third Race— 5 8 Mile. 

2-year-olds. Allowances. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. 1ml. Horses. Wgt 

2294 Princess Teck. .108 2336 Altanera 104 

2107 Rachael 104 2136 Thanet 104 

2336 Truelight 104 2292 Springday 1(4 

2218 Elise B 104 Astrella 104 

13.56 M. McLaughlinl04 22.59 Taluca 1(4 

2218 Salsetta 104 2218 E.>-t Ne Regina. ICO 

2107 Earth 100 1996 Rose Tree 1(X) 

2292 Elaine 100 16.53 Black Heart . .. K 0 

2292 Fintray 100 22l8 Sis Tan 100 

668 Peg the Shrew. .100 2218 Salome 100 

f ourth Race — 1 Mile and 70 Yards. 
3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2186 Probasco (5)....l09 2:160 Rasper (4) 107 

2337 Black Silk (4).. 107 2:163 Reimy (4) 105 

2338 Whiteside (4). .1(4 (2255) JohnHavlinCi)l(H) 

2:1:17 Joe ('lark (3)... 96 2360 Kingstone (3).. 93 
(2358)Allegra (3) 91 

Fifth Ract —5 1-2 Furlongs. 
2-year-olds. Selling 

ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

(2362)Irby B 107 2215 Robair 107 

2322 Argonaut 105 (1999)Czarowitz 103 

2:122 Hats Off 99 2162 The Planet ....*99 

2339 San Juan 99 23:19 Julius Maras.. 99 

22.56 Giveaway 99 Winthrop 99 

2290 Billy Arnold ... 99 2290 Gray Eclipse... 99 

2215 John Hancock . 99 2290 Harry B 99 

(2215) Hamza 98 2162 Assassin 98 

1939 Gid Law 98 (2290)Capt. Peirsall 96 

::::th Race— 7-8 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2075 Judith C (3) ...1(>8 *2*lo Yellow Rose(a)107 

2:119 King Cbarlie(5)106 2260 Lismore (6) 106 

777 Victorious(4) ..105 2214 Frontman (5).. 103 

2076 Seabrooke (3).. 101 460 SautaMaria(5) . 101 

2135 *Lufra (3) 99 2319 Annie M (4) 9H 

2:138 Richfield (3)... 95 1889 The Merchant(3)95 
2335 Gretcben S (3) . 93 2335 Miss Emma (3) 93 

2108 Remnant II (3) 89 
*By Silvermine. 



MILWAUKEE ENTRIES. 



Probabilities: Weather clear; track good. 
First Race— 3-4 Mile. 
3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 
Wgt. 



ind. Horse.s. 

2314 Tonica (3) 91 

1551 Sp kena (3) 98 

179 Ariau (3) 100 

8.53 El Capitau (:1)..I09 

(2334) B t Fly Jr (5). Ill 
Jas V Carter(5) 111 
2261 Sen Morrill (a) .114 
*By Springbok. 



Ind. Horses. Wgt. 
(2227)*Trilby (3).... 98 
2314 Bertrand (3)...1(X) 

23;i3 Stark (4) 109 

2272 Lady Rose (5). 109 

729 Guard (a) Ill 

221 Whiff (4) 112 

2275 Wiruberg (5)... 114 



Second Race— 3-4 Mile. 

2-year-olds. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses Wgt. 

2273 Sister Adele 89 2331 Maud Lyles 89 

2318 Dawn 89 2:131 Majesta 89 

2332 Foreigner 92 2273 Goldie Locks.. 93 

2262 Don Giarencio. 96 (2318) Scarborough, , 96 

2331 Banq ioll 96 ( 2169) Good Order. . . 98 

(2226)Elyria 104 2197 Kiug’sCounsel. 106 

Third Race— 1 Mile and 70 Yards. 

3-yoar-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

2372 Uncle Jim (6).. 109 2372 Sandoval (4).,. 110 
(2333)Spriugtime(5).ll3 2372 Peytonia (5).. ..114 

2263 Buckwa (5) 114 2372 MissPerkins(6) 105 

f ourth Race— 7-8 Mile. 

3-year-olds and upward. 

Schlitz Brewing Handicap. 

Ind. Horses Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wg^ 

2:75 Loo^am (3) 93 2373*S. Faverdale(3) ^ 

227.5*Weruberg (5) ...117 2.173 Orinda (.5) 97 

(2373)Kamsin (3) 111 

♦Burns & Waterhouse entry. 

Fifth Race— 7-8 Mile. 

3 year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind- Horses. Wgt 
23,i2*Auut Sally (3) . . 98 

OQrr.4 IP I / A \ 1 



Ind. Horses. Wgt. 

2314 Gameiia (3) 98 

2334 Belle Boyd (3) . 98 
2314 Minnie VV (4;...lo7 

2374 Samson (4) 109 

2227 Master Fre(J(5).lll 
2374 Montep nso (4) 112 
♦By Bramble. 



2374 Elwyn (4) ICO 

2374 Prince (4) iu9 

2333 Alamo (4) 109 

2334 LaVerne (5)... Ill 




DATLY RACIlSra FOUM. 






LAKESIDE FORM CHART. 

LAKESIDE, IND.. July 18.— Seventh Day. Lakeside Jockey Club. Summer Meeting of Fifteen 
Days. Weather showery; track heavy. 



Presiding J udge, M. N atbanson. Starter, Richard Dwyer. 


Q ^ FIRST RACE— 3-4 Milo. Purse $300. 3-yoar-olds and upward. 


Selling. 




Ind. Horses. Wt. St. % A % Str.Fin. Jockeys Ownrrs 


Op C] 


[ PI 



Ink Ink Ink Maguussou (\ Dorsey 4 H'/t 1 

23 23 21‘42-J D. Davis Spring('alo Stable 6 G 2 

iVi Wi 42 W. Jones Clierry Stable 5 6 2 

3 h 33 3 nk 45 Dorsey B. J. Johnson 6 8 3 

62 9 81 53 Furr Prospect Stable 30 10 4 

9i4 8 nk 72 6 nk (hirt’ndahl Marsh & Harding .50 .50 20 

8 nk 65 5V4 75 |j. Soden (’rescent Stable 8 12 5 

73 10 61 81 H Clay (JiarJes Bros 8 10 4 

,5iV^.5i 9 9 Macklin M. Sabbath 10 10 4 

10 11 10 10 Vandusen (’. O’Fallon 8 12 5 

11 7 ‘All 11 L. Smith J. H. Kintz 30 60 20 

12 12 12 12 R.Armstr’g John Kokker .50 60 20 

Time, 13, 25, 37A, ^0%, 1 :17A. 

Winner— Ch. m, 5, by Favor— Delphine. , r-.. u , 

Post 6 minutes. Start good. Won driving and all out; second and third same. Siddeolus 
threw his rider at the post and ran away a half mile. Ida Wagner hung on gamely ; boy was 
fighting her last three furlongs. Laila Kookh ran a good race. It was a very cheap lot. 

Scratched— Mr. Dunlap. %; Lucinda. 109. 



2296 MARY L 
2296 IDA WAGNER 
2045 MOLLIE KING 
2126 TERR AGNES 
2268 LALLA ROOKH 
2101 GRATZ HANLY 
2271 LONGDALE 
1880 SATINET 
2299 MELODY 
2207 SIDDEOLUS 
1854 LADY (XYDE 
2207 McILDUFF 



96 4A 
95A.5NK 
97A2H 
98 Ink 
98 
96 
111 
94 
109 

105 11 
98 10 

106 12 



7A 

6« 

8 nk 

3nk 



2353 



SEt’OND RACE— 3-4 Mile. Purse $b00. 2-year-olds. Allowances. 



Ind. 



Horses. 



Wt. St. A A H Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op (U PI 



2297 SIEGFRIED 
2241 BROWN GIRL 
2267 THOS. PAINE 
1961 WHITE FROST 
22;i8 GERTRUDE 
DR. HARRIS 



113 

95 

94 

108 

93 

11'8 



2 h 

f.NK 

1« 

6 

4A 

3» 



Cleary 
n. Davis 
Clay 

W. Jones 
Willis 
L. Smith 



Merry Glen Stable 6-5 1 



Ed Bn»wn 
W. H. Roller 
Avondale Stable 
D. Waldo 
(’. A. Long 



8 8 
3 3 

8-5 13-5 
15 30 

12 60 



1-2 

3 

4-5 

4-5 

10 

20 



43 2 A 1“ 

52 21A1NK 2A 
2 nk 41A3«A33 
31/, 3 nk 42 410 
6 510 520 550 

Ink 6 6 6 

Time, 13 A. 25 A, 38 A, 52 A, 1 :19. 

Winner — Blk. c, by Wagner — Godiva. 

Post 2 minutes. Start good. Won in a long hard drive of two ; third and fourth driving also. 
Thomas Paine was the freshest horse at the finish and had the race been a trifle farther he would 
have won. White Frost did not like the going. Brown Girl’s race was a good one. 

Scratched— Sutton, 113. 



2354 



THI RD RACE— 3-4 Mile. Purse $300. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling.; 



Ind. Horses. 



Wt. St. A A % Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op ( :i PI 



2299 THE KITTEN 
2299 ETHEL LEAH 

2270 RAPIER 
BILL ELLISON 

2269 (CONNEMARA 

2271 TERRA AR(^HER 
2126*RUBBERNE(^K 
2131 BOB WAGNER 
1807 REVEILLE 

50 DELUDER 
(2295)BRYAN 

*By Vagabond. 
Winner — B. in, 5 
Post 2 minutes. 



109 



8A 

Ink 

7nk 

6A 

4 nk 



114 
109 
111 
101 
103 
111 
98 10 
100 11 
111 3 nk 



9nk 

5A 



L. Soden 
Dorsey 
VV . Jones 
Furr 
Fox 
Clay 



B, Schreiber 3-2 2 

F. M. Bloom 6 6 

L. M. O’Hara 2 A 2 

P. Stanton & (’o. 12 15 



r\l Shore 
Ogden Stable 
H. .Jones 
Winder Stable 



3i;/i2iAl" 1-^ 

IH Pf 2^A2 n 
41 4 nk 42 3 A 

2 A 31 5h 410 

6‘ 62 3 A 53 

3 nk 5.3 85 65 

103 71A6A 71 A D. Davis 

51 82 7>y 82 Morse 

9A10**^10 910 Magnusson R. (Ti’insted 

11 11 11 105 Randall F. Starkweathei 

7V* 95 9 11 C. Johnson Goo. Wilde 

Time, 12^4, 24 A, 37 A, 50 A, 1 :03, 1 :16^. 

, by Linden— Kit Cat. 

Start good. Won handily; next three fighting hard. The Kitten was pounds 
the best and won as she pleased. Rapier was messed about on far turn, but finished strong. He 
ran an honest race, (jonnemara looked dangerous at the head of the stretch but tired when the 
pinch came. Watch Bill Ellison. 

Scratched — Repeater, 109; Bustup, 96. 



20 

6 

10 

15 

10 

30 

8 



4-5 

2 

4-5 

6 

8 

2 A 
8 
8 
6 
12 
2 



2355 



FOURTH RAC'E— 7 l-'i Furlongs. Purse $.500. 3-year-olds and upward. Handicap 



Ind. Horses. 



Wt. St. A A 



Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



2300 DOCKSTADER 
(2299) NIKITA 
2329 KING BORS 
2268 DOCTOR G 



90 IH IH la lA 2 A 12 Magnusson J. F. Davis 6 4 1 

92 3 nk 22 23 23 lA 22 Clay W. H. Roller 1 7-5 out 

82A2" 3 nk 4 3 nk 32 Donaldson Ben Falk 8 8 2 

95 4 4 3 nk 4 4 4 Cleary Merry Glen Stable 3-2 9-5 1-2 

Time. 7, 19A, 31 A, 43%, 57 A. 1 :ll, 1 :38. 

Winner— B. g. 5, by Leouatus— Glen Mercy. 

Post 2 seconds. Start good. Won handily; second out to the pound ; third driving. Dr. G 
was bumped into and knocked off his stride just as rubber was released. Ho ran a bad race. 
Boy rede Dockstader with rare judgment. King Bors goes best in the mud. 

Scratched— Ingomar, 97 ; Assignee, 116; Sunny, 93; Onalaska, 88; Simmons, 105. 



2356 



FIFTH RAC’E— 1 1-16 Miles. Purse $400. 3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 



iud. Horses. 



Wt. St. A A 



Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl 



PI 



2181 SUNNY 
2ulo LANGDON 
2210 REDSKIN 
2270 LITTLE TOM 
2269 ALTO JUNE 
POWHATTA 



99 IH 1‘A12 D 13 18 D. Davis 

97 3 nk 32 310 22 28 210 W. Jones 

119 4 nk 22 22 310 310 32 L. Soden 

99 2» 51 42 43 45 410 Peyton 

97 5nk 41A5NK 6 6 5 A Clay 
97 6 6 6 55 510 6 Furr 

Time, 6A. 18A, 31A, 43%, .56A. 1 :09%, 1 :23A, 1 
Winner — Br. c, 3, by Terra C’otta or Folsom— Sunshine, 

Post 3 seconds. Start good. Won galloping; second eased up; third driving. Redskin tired 
after going a half. He can not manage weight in the mud. Langdon ran an honest race, but was 
always outrun. There was nothing to the race outside the first three. 

Scratched— Second Attempt, 95; Doctor G, 94; Assignee. 114; Urania. 112; Millie M. 82. 



J. Steppe 3 3 A 3-5 

J. H. Kelly & Co 3 2 out 

T. W. Coulter 4-5 13-10 out 
L. Lammertz & C'o20 20 4 

H. J. Cassard 15 15 4 

Stubbs Bros 25 25 6 

, 1;.51A. 



2357 



SIXTH RACE — Mile, Purse $400. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling, 



Iiid. Horses. 



Wt. St. A 



Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl Pi 



(2048)1NGOMAK 100 

2270 JENNIE JUNE 103 

2269 JOHN HICKEY 103 

(2269)MINERVA 95 

(2270) SIMMONS 109 

2268 JUDGE BAKER 100 

2271 W-4RREN POINT 95 

2298 LILLIAN E 90 



3NK Ink Ink Ink ly ^ J). Davis 

5 A 2nk 2h 23 23 28 Sherland 

8 8 8 8 41A31A Everett 

6nk 6A 41A42 5 A 42 Randall 

2>« 31 33 3nk 32 52 

7 A 71 61A5NK 63 6 A 
IH 51 72 61A71 71 

4nk 41A5NK 7h 8 8 



Time, 13, 25, ;17 A, 50A. 104, 1 :17 A, 1 :31. 



Kentucky Stable 9-5 
Liberty Stable 8 

F. M. Bloom 8 

StringerAStewart 6 
Merry Glen Stable 2A 
Oakley Stable 6 

Magnusson Ruddy Bros. 40 
Clay W. H. Roller 6 



(deary 
W. Jones 



6-5 

15 

10 

20 

2 

12 

40 

5A 



2-5 

5 

3 
7 

7-10 

4 
15 

2 



Winner— B. g, 6, by Bubbler— Josephine. 

Post 1 minute. Start good. Won handily in the end ; .second with something left ; third all 
out. Ingomar had speed to give away, and outclassed his field. Jennie June put him to a drive 
at the head of the stretch, but she was easily disposed of. Simmons got a miserable ride, and 
did not run his race. Lillian E could not outrun a fat man. John Hickey’s race was a good one. 

Scratched — Mur al, 90. 



POINTS FOR BETTORS. 



The big Morris castoff Florian is nearly due to 
win a race for Bill Daly. His last race was a 
good one. 

Dr Jim, the fast and flighty Keene colt, by 
Jim Gore— Lizzie, was kicked at the post last 
Thursday and may not oe so fast for a period. 

Decapod, who won a Coney Island jumping 
race last Thui sday is an equine model for such 
sport. He was highly tried as a youngster by 
Eastin & Larrabie and is a brother to Poet 
Scout. 

Capt. Sam Brown’s filly Lucdle H was ruined 
as a racing tool in her last Latonia race— Fri- 
day, July 10. She is to go to the farm as a 
broodmare. 

There are few more consistent racehorses in 
the west than David and Pinkey Potter, racing 
at Milwaukee. Mud running takes the best in 
training back to David. 

Daily Racing Form hasn’t any “inside in- 
formation” and rejects what is offered outside 
the news. Yet, last Saturday its selections were 
financially gorgeous. The only ^yay to win is the 
mathematical way. Our form is the result of 



desk work and wired observation. Yet we aver- 
age over 45 per cent of winners. Five sets of 
races, including twenty-nine events wore cov- 
ered Saturday. In these twenty-nine races 
eighty-seven horses were nominated one — two- 
three. Of the selections ten were scratched, 
leaving seventy-selections. Of these fifty-three 
ran within the money. In the twenty-nine races 
fifteen of our selections won. Ail the stake 
winners were named. In two of them the three 
horses were selected. Yesterday in twenty-nine 
races twelve winners were named. Such results, 
figured on Daily Racing Form’s plan, proves 
from the angle of common sense and result how 
every day honest racing is. 

The Eastern notion now turns toward Don 
d’ Oro as less than great. Eastern racing notion 
is normally much too slow and local. It is also 
prejudiced, as against the West, which accounts 
for Ornament’s price last Saturday. 

Before the Realization start last Saturday 
Hastings showed lameness, and the great colt is 
in danger of being enrolled on the list of “splen- 
did cripples.” 

The r-jason that “Pittsburg Phil’s recent pur- 
chase from Marcus Daly, Hamilton II, did not 
start in the Realization was that he pulled up 
lame in his “sampling’' for the race. 




Telegraphic... CorrecI’. Concise. Comely 
form Sheets and Entries expertly indexed, 
Traini ng News a Specialt y. 

Off our own Presses... 

Before the Chicago dailies. 

Overnight PoolingT 



126 Fifth Avenue 



.1896.... 




bOPLANPS StUP 



15 MILES FROM ST LOUIS ON THE WABASH 

BARNEY SCHREIBER’S MOPELFARM. 

THE CHOICEST OF AUSTRALIAN BLOOD. 

FOUL SHOT BY MUSKET-SLANDER. 



J 

a 

o 






B 



oBo 

'C <D S 

3 cd o 
'S J- t. ■ 
t— 1 to a 

.£§■0 

ga§ 



'Longbow 

^Legerdermain, 

'West Australian 

^ Brown Bess 

'Calendar 

^Cassandra 

dam of Yattendon 

f(’ap-a-pie 

grandsire of 
Yattendon 

[bcU Brand 

(a noted race mare) 



( Itburiel i Touchstone 

/ Verbena 

( Miss Bowe j Cattou 

/Tranby’s dam 

( Pantaloon j Castrel 

J 7 Idalia 

( Decoy j Filho-da Puta 

7 Finesse 

Melbourne j Humphrey Clinker 

7 Morpeth’s dam 

Mowerina .3 Touchstone 

7 Emma 

( Camel j Whalebone 

7 7 Duchess of Selim 

( Daughter of S Breutandorf 

7 Mrs. Cruickshank 

Canteen \ Waxy Pope 

7 Castania 

Hambletonia s Stamford 

7 Harmonica 

( Tros j Priam 

] 7 AUy 

( Alice Grey s Rous’ Emigrant 

7 Gulnare 

( The (’olonel \ Whisker 

■< 7 My Lady’s dam 

( Sister to (’actus S Sultan 

7 Duchess of York 

Dover j Patron 

7 Maid of Kent 

Sophy j Skelhiuda 

7 Sally Brassb‘ 



ALCONA Jr. THE HANDSOMEST YOU NQ TROTTING 
SIREALIVE . FEE #50. 

BARNEY SCHREIBER. 

BRIPGlETON. mo. 




DA.ILY lRA.CrSG FORM 



LATONIA F 

COVINGTON, KY., July 18.— Twenty-First D 
Weather cloudy ; track heavy. 



):m CHART. 

uatonia Jockey Club. 



Summer Meeting. 



Presiding Judge, J. J. Carter. Starter, J. P. v 



2358 



FIRST RAI;E-3-4 Mile. 3-yoar-olds. Allowances. 



Ind. Horses. 



Wt. St. H. ^ 



Str.Fin Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



Ank 2n« 


c 12 


12 


Perkins 


B. McClelland 


6-5 


6-5 


01 


4 nk 31 //25 


28 


Fowler 


T. Baxter 


2 


2 


4- 


7V4 71 


32 


33 


Ray 


Smith & Ferguson 5 


10 


4 


QVz 5«« 


: 4'^'< 


42 


V. Wilson 


^okane Stable 


30 


40 


12 


12 iH 


.5nk 51 


J. Perkins 


W. Showalter 


40 


40 


12 


51 6 


6 


6 


Sherrin 


J Mitchell & Son 


40 


40 


12 


12 7 


7 


7 


Shore 


A. W. Thurman 


50 


60 


20 


13 13 


8 


8 


McDonald 


W. C. Arnold 


40 


40 


12 


14 14 


9 


9 


Fishburn 


J. F. Price 


50 


50 


20 


11 11 


10 


10 


Tubbs 


W. Peak 


50 


50 


1.5 


9 10 


11 


11 


C. Reiff 


E. F. McLean 


10 


10 


4 


8 9 


12 


12 


F. Russell 


Montrose Farm 


30 


40 


12 


10 12 


13 


13 


K. Morgan 


Wakemau Bros. 


30 


40 


12 


2h 45 14 


14 


VanKuren 


Springhurst Stb 


50 


;0 


20 



2217 ALLEGRA 110 2 

2293 ST. HELENA 115 1 
2103 WHITE OAK 112 12 

2335 KEN. THATCHER 110 8 
455 MAMIE STONE 105 5 
2289 MATTIE GRAHAM 105 4 
2182 MAR. MONTROSE 105 9 
2289 CHARLIE YOUNG 115 13 
2293 ELKW’D PUZZL’RllO 14 
1790 MARIANA 105 11 

1463 NOEL no 7 

2289 GEN. MONTROSE 110 6 
QUI VIVE 115 10 

2103 HAFIZ 105 3 _ 

Time. 25, 50H, 1:15“4. 

W’inner— B. f. 4. by Longfellow— Queen Beluga. i u « n i 

Start good, by machine. Won easily. Mamie Stone showed great speed. Hafaz was pulled up 
last furlong. White Oak came very strong last quarter. , j. T^ i i. ms t i 

Scratched— Kankakee, 115; Parson, 112 ; Buckwe, 110; Arrack, 10a; Dad’s Daughter, 105; Lady 
Modred, 105; Good Advice, 105; Station T, 112: Mary Revenaugh, lu5; Coffee Pot, 105. 



2359 



SECOND RACE— 1 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



Ind. Horses. 



2216 HOTSPUR 
1490 JAPONICA 
861 KOKO 
2255 RAYMOND 
2335 (miMSON I 
2:123 DOORGA 



Wt. 


St. 


14 % 


14 


Str.Fin, 


Jockeys 


Owners Op 


( 1 


Pi 


L 89 


4 


210 15 


13 


13 11 


B, Blevins 


Graves&Lancaster 5 


8 


3 


101 


5 


6/a 32 


33 


33 22 


Scherrer 


W. H. McLemore 8 


12 


5 


88 


2 


4 /a 2N»t 


22 


2 nk 34 


Du pee 


Ed Corrigan 6 


5 


2 


106 


1 


51 51 


51 


5/a 42 


Perkins 


Thos. Baxter 2 


3 


1 


98 


6 


7 4nk 


4% 4nk 51 


Fowler 


Rutledge&Steveus 8-5 


7-5 


12 


91 


7 


3« 61 


6 


6 6 


C. Reiff 


Mascotte Stable 60 


60 


20 


96 


3 


13 7 


7 


7 7 


Sherrin 


M. M. Young 6 


8 


3 



Time, 26, 5114,1:17,1:43. 

Winner— Ch. f. 3, by King Eric— Manilla. , , . . , , u 1 

Start good, by machine. Won handily. Doorga opened a big gap to half pole where she 
stopped badly. Hotspur finished strong. Anna Garth was the best horse and had no trouble. 



2360 

Ind. Horses. 



THIRD RACE— 1 1-8 Miles. 3-year-olds and upwatd. Selling. 



Wt. 


St. 




/* 




Str.Fin. 


Jockeys 


106 


1 


1/a 


l/» 


m 12 


Martin 


91 


5 


53 


45 


45 


31 23 


Dupee 


no 


2 


3h 


3h 


21 


21 33 


Thorpe 


108 


4 


6 


6 


.51 


52 41 


Perkins 


95 


3 


4h 


5/a 6 


6 51 


Nutt 


103 


6 


2h 


IH 


3«4 4h 6 


Scherrer 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 
2 

8-5 
1-2 
5 
5 

4-5 



2039 CAPTIVE 
2320 HOWARD MANN 
2022 LOBENGULA 
2216 RASPER 
(1940)KINGSTONE 
2216)HERMES 



P. Dunne 3 

Will’ms&W’nscott 5 
G. B. Morris & Co 8-5 
F. Perkins 12 

C. J. Kelly 12 

S. K. Hughes & Co 2 



5 

4*4 

7-5 

15 

15 

2% 



Time, 26, 51. 1 :16, 1 :42, 1 :.55?4. 

Winner— Ch. c. 3, by Strathmore— Black Maria, 

Start good by machine. Won easily ; second and third handily. Captive was very speedy. 
Howard Mann, off badly, ran well. Lobeugula tired last furlong. Hermes quit to nothing on 
the end. ■ 



2361 



FOURTH RACE— 1 1-8 Miles. 3-year-olds. Himyar Stakes. 



Ind. Horses. 



Wt. St. H 



Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



(2320) FIRST MATE 
1573 RAMIRO 
(2187) LOKI 

2022 BEN HOLLADAY 
2320 SIR VASSAR 

♦Coupled in betting. 



Martin Eastia&Larrabee* 2 

Thorpe W. H. Laudeman 4 

Ray E. F. McLean 1 

Perkins Eastin&Larrabee* 2 

R. Williams H. T. Griffin 15 



13-5 3-5 
16-5 4-5 
9-10 out 
13-5 3-5 
20 6 



122 5 U 12 11 12 11 

122 1 2Vi 21 21 23 25 

ll7 3 41 41 31 31 SVi 

117 2 5 5 5 4‘/s 41 

117 4 31 3h 4h 5 5 

„ Time, 25/,, 5034. 1:17, 1:4214, 1:54. 

Winner— Ch. c, by Fonso- Shipmate. , , . 

Start good by machine. Won easily; second and third driving. First Mate was never headed. 
Ramiro ran a good, game race, but couldn’t get up. Loki did not seem fit. Holladay was under 
a pull all the route. 

Scratched— Captive, 122. » 



2362 



FIFTH RACE)— 5 1-3 Furlongs. 2-year-olds. Handicap. 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. 


St. k 


!4 


54 


Str.Fin. 


, Jockeys 


Owne^rs 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


22.56 IRBY B 


102 


1 


7 


7 


65 


1/s 


C. Reiff 


H. T. Griffin 


6 


8 


3 


(2256) F F V 


111 


3 


3 H 


53 


5h 


2 /a 


Ray 


T. Tarr 


8-5 


2/, 


1 


(2162) ABE FURST 


111 


2 


IH 


IH 


Ink 


3h 


Scherrer 


Baker & Gentry 


8 


10 


4 


(2336) ETHEL LEE 


107 


6 


21 


22 


23 


42 


Thorpe 


W. H. Laudeman 


3 


3 /a 


6-5 


BOX 


107 


5 


51 


4" 


3 /a 51 


J. Perkins 


W. Showalter 


50 


60 


20 


(llOl)NEWPORT ' 


100 


4 


41 


31 


7 


6 


Fowler 


Versailles Stable 


6 


8 


3 


2215 ALVIN W 


106 


7 


6 


6 


4 h 


7 


Fishburn 


A. W. Wallace 


8 


10 


4 


1859 CHARINA 


106 


8 


Bolted 






Martin 


Gentry Bros. 


4 


3 


1 



Time, 2534. 50K. 1:0834- 
Winner— B. c, by Inspector B— Pretense. ^ 

Start good by machine. Won driving; second and third same. Abe Furst led to the last 
eighth. Irby B came like a wild horse at the end. Ethel Lee was very tired at finish. F F V 
ran a good race. Charina boltert just after start. 



2363 



SIXTH RACE— 1 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. 


St. 


54 


/s 


54 


Str.Fin. 


Jockeys 


Owners 


Op ('1 


PI 


(1 ‘293) AIMEE 


98 


2 


5 


41 


21 


25 11 


C. Reiff 


Goodwill Stable 


10 -20 


5 


2420 CUTICLENE 


98 


1 


1« 


11 


11 


Ink 25 


Scherrer 


A. B. Conley 


4 5 


8-5 


2257 SALVABLE 


106 


5 


3 nk 


3h 


33 


33 33 


Martin 


P. Dunne 


3-5 11-20 out 


2019 LETCHER 


97 


3 


4/a 42 


42 


42 /a 43 


Dupee 


Million & Davis 


5 5 


8-5 


2291 REIMY 


103 


4 


22 


21 


5 


5 5 


Fowler 


Versailles Stable 


15 ‘20 


5 



Time, 25/,, 5014, 1 :16, 1 :42. 

Winner— Ch. f, 3, by Sir Dixon— Amy Davenport. . , , 1 r 

Start good, by machine. Won driving: second and third same. Aimee showed a good turn of 
speed ii^tretch and finished with some left. Cuticlene swerved last eighth. Salvable ran a poor 
race. !^imy was speedy early. 

Scratched — Hoodwink, 105 : Morte Fonse, 103. 



THE KEY TO TURF SUCCESS. 

About August 10 Daily Racing Form Publish- 
ing Co. will issue a book that will give the 
racing public more information than it ever had 
before. The volume will be of pocket size and 
built for long and hard use on linen paper and 
within flexible leather covers. It will be copy- 
righted as a book and patented as an appliance 
to racing. Daily Racing Form Manual will 
cont.aiu a haiidicapper’s table, such as is usually 
foisted on this and that “lamb” at $50 and $100. 
We cannot supply a mental key of application. 
Nature is the only doctor in such special cases 
and it is busy in other lines just now. The 
handicapping table is one of weight 
applied to distance and time, in general use. 
To it will bo attached a track— speed series of 
compilations— our own. It is the result of a 
year’s work on average speed, at all distances 
and all American tracks at their best. Other 
conditions are not within mathematics, because 



the complexion of less than perfect going is not 
figurablo. The Manual will also give the track 
records of all the American courses, book mak- 
ing percentages and an experience tale by the 
editor of Daily Racing Form on “how not 
to lose on the race track.” This tale will bo a 
personal one of loss and gain and the avenues 
through which both came. The Manual will 
not have a large edition. Its price will be far 
below its value. Only advanced orders will be 
filled — as they come. The book will cost $5 and 
can be delivered August 12 at the latest. All its 
compilations will be intelligent, simple and up to 
date. Some dozen subscribers to Leather Form 
did not call for the books they ordered— and did 
not pay for in advance. Orders for the Manual 
must be accompanied by the price. The book 
is not for sale by newsdealers, outside Hawley 
of Cincinnati, Jett of St. Louis, E. C. Weatherly 
our San Francisco agent. Hallo of New Orleans, 
and Dearing of Louisville. 



MORRIS PARK FUTURE STAKES. 

Morris Park announces its new stakes for the 
fall meeting, October 13 to November 3. All 
close August 1. Those with supplementary en 
tries wind up September 7. 

For two-year-olds— The Hurricana, selling, 
$2,000; the Castleton, for fillies, selling, $2,000; 
the Silver Brook, selling, $2,000; the Rancocas, 
condition, $2,000. 

For three-year-olds— The Jerome Handicap, 
$2,500; the Belle Meade, condition. $2,000; the 
Hunter (fillies) Handicap, $2,500; the Ramapo 
Handicap, $2,000; the Fairview, selling, $2,000; 
the Woodburn (fillies), selling, $2,000: the Mor- 
ris Park Handicap, $2,000. 

For three-year-olds and upward— The Manhat- 
tan Handicap, $2,000; the Municipal Handicap, 
$2,500; the Turf and Field Club Handicap, 
$3,000; the Auction, selling, $1,500. 

For all ages — The Bronx Highweight Handi- 
cap, $2,000; the Westchester Highweight Han- 
dicap, $2,000 ; the Fordham Highweight Kandi 
cap, $2,000. 

Supplementary entries for the following will 
be received Sept. 7, the first entries for which 
were made E’eb. 4, 1816. 

For two-> ear olds— Nursery Handicap, $4,000; 
Champagne Handicap, $4,000; White Plains 
Handicap, $4,000. 

The fixtures for which first entries will be re- 
ceived August 1, and supplementary entries 
received Sept. 7, are for two-year-old ; The Ran- 
cocas, for colts and fillies three years old; The 
Jerome and the Morris Park Handicap, and the 
Morris Park Handicaps, and the Hunter for 
fillies. For three-year-olds and upward. The 
Manhattan, The Municipal, The Turf and Field 
Clubs Handicap, For all ages. The Bronx, The 
Westchester, The Fordham Highweight Handi- 
caps. 

Other events to be announced for which en- 
tries will be received Sept. 7, are as follows : 

1897. For Then Two-Year-Olds— Spring— Juv- 
enile, $4,000; Spring — Fashion (fillies), $2500; 
Spring — Eclipse, $10,000. Autumn — Nursery, 
$5,000. 

1898. For Then Two-Year-Olds— Spring— Na- 
tional Stallion. $20,000. 

For Then Three-Year-Olds— Spring— Witl ers, 
$5,000; Ladies, $1,000. 

1899. For Then Three-Year-Olds — Spring — 
The Belmont, $10,000. 

The entries for the National Stallion to be 
made September 7, for stallions only. The en^ 
try for foals of 1896 will close some time in De- 
cember. 



Coney Island Fall Stakes. 

The Coney Island Jockey Club announce the 
following stakes for the autumn meeting, to 
close with Clerk of the Course Crickmore on 
Aug 1 : 

For 2-year-olds and upward— Flight Stakes, 
$2,500; 7-8 mile. 

For 3-yeaf-olds— September Stakes, $2,.500 : 1 3-8 
miles. 

For 2-year-olds- Flatbush Stakes, $2,000; 7-8 
mile, and the Great Eastern Handicap, $5,000; 
futurity coarse. 



LATONIA’S YEARLINGS SELL WELL 



The health of the Western turf is improving 
from day to day. Prices at the Woodard & 
Shanklin sale recently at Latonia wore excel- 
lent, So were the goods offered. Forty-one 
yearlings were sold for $20,425, an average of 
nearly $500 as follows : 

B. e, by Logic— Sea Mew: J. B. Ringgold, $350. 

Br. c, by Logic— Blue Stocking: L. B. Ring- 
gold, $550. 

B, c, by Logic — Bonnots o’ Blue ; C. B. Reid. 
$75. 

Ch .c, by Julien — Fortuna ; W.T. Gooding, $25. 

Br. c. by Hindoo— Francesca ; P. Dunne. $1,250. 

(ffi. c, by Hindoo — Miss Moore; James Hukill, 
$:i50. 

B. f, by Hanover— Meriden ; Cliff Porter, $900. 

B. f, by Strathmore— Little Lou; Milt. Young, 
$1.50, 

Br. c. by Sir Dixon — Miss Annie; Elmer Rai- 
ley. $450. 

B. c, by Hindoo— Morgan Girl ; B. Sclireiber, 
$375. 

B. f, by Kimloo — Brambaletta; Milt Young 

$ 200 . 

Br. c. by Hindoo— Brenda ; C. .J. Kelly, $475. 

Ch. c, by Onondago— Sungleain ; W. II. Laude- 
man. $1..5(X). 

B. f, by Sir Dixon- Oil ie Glenn ; J. J. Marklien, 
$.50. 

B. f, by Leonatus — Dreamland; .Jan Jacinto 
Stable, $125. 

B. c, by Hindo— La Esmeralda ; G. B, Morris, 
$600. 

Ch. f, by Hindoo— Red and Blue; James Hu- 
kill, $400. 

Br. f, by Sir Dixon— Mattie Amelia ; Cliff Por- 
ter, $200. 



B. c, by Sir Dixon— Fauna ; G. B. Morris. $800- 
Blk. c, by Sir Dixon— Cherry Blossom; J. J. 
Marklein, $275. 

Ch. c. by Sir Dixon — Nina Archer; E. F. Mc- 
Lean. $250. 

Ch. c. by Hindoo — (^-ambria : Jas. Hukill, $100. 
B. c. by Whistle Jacket — Duchess of Montrose; 
(\ J. Kelly, $750, 

B. c. by Leonatus— Bello of Runnymede ; E. F. 
McLean, $275. 

Ch. f, by Hindoo— Alpena ; Leland Bros., $1.50. 
B. f, by Hindoo- Miss Used ; J. J. Marklein, 
$ 100 . 

B. c, by H indoo— Pure Rye; James Murphy, 

$ 1 , 200 . 

Ch. c, by Hindoo — Jaconet; T. Griffin, $950. 

B. f, by Sir Dixon— Villette ; E. F. McLean, 
$275. 

B. c, by Hindoo— Anna Todd ; W. & A. Mc- 
Guigan, $275. 

B. c, by Hindoo— Alga; W. & A. McGuigan, 

$:3oo. 

Ch. f , by Sir Dixon— Roseville ; Cliff Porter, 
$1,500. 

B. f‘ by Hindoo— Mary McGowan ; J. P. Chinn, 

$ 100 . 

(d). f, by Hindoo— Vassar ; Leland Bros., $300. 
B. f, by Whi.Ce Jacket— Queen o’May; Louis 
Drake. $400. 

B. c. by Leonatus — Lady of the Lake; Cliff 
Porter, $12(X). 

Cdi. f. by Leonatus— Nettie Howell; Hal Wood 
ford, $200. 

('ll. c. by Fons )— Eva S. ; Hankins & Johnson, 
$1500. 

Br. f, by Sir Dixon— Lake BroL*zo; Hal Wood- 
ford, $700. 

B. c. by Leonatus— Vienna ; E. Corrigan, $150. 
B. f, by Leonatus— Cadma ; Cliff Porter, $300. 



Daily Racing Form’s Range. 

DAILY RACING FORM is the American 
daily guide and authority for the American 
racing public. It has no competitors. Its 
charts are complete. Its information is inteL 
ligent and its selections average 48 per cent 
in winners. It Is clean, careful, concise and 
costly and without a rival in the field it rep- 
resents. Its circulation is 50,000 per week in 
a special field that is of superfine value to the 
advertiser who sells goods that suit a high 
class of cash buyers. 



FILLERS FOR FORM BOOKS. 

A limited number of back numbers of Daily 
Racing Form are kept on hand and can be sup- 
plied to those who want to fill their form records. 
The charts cover the racing term from New Or- 
leans. March 25, to date, and includes the racing 
at the end of New Orleans and San Francisco, 
and the full meetings at Birmingham, Little 
Rock. Memphis. Nashville, Newport, Lexington, 
Louisville, Oakley, St. Louis, Windsor, Forsyth, 
Sheffield, Lakeside, Washington, Morris Park, 
Aqueduct and Brooklyn. 

A Big Thing.... 

....For Racegoers 




Issued every two 




All prominent newsdealers and race 
tracks. 

Publishers, - - GOODWIN BROS. 

1440 Broadway, New York 



R^OIlsTG ITORM 



s 



' AQUEDUCT FORM CHART. 

AQUEDUCT, N. Y., July 18. — Sixth Day. Queens County Jockey Club. Summer Meeting. 
Weather clear ; track fast. 



Presiding Judge, C. McDowell ; Starter, Thomas Flynn. 



2375 



FIRST RACE — 1-2 Mile. 2-year-olds. SeUing, 



Ind. Horses. 


Wt. St. H 


hi \ Str.Fin. 


Jockeys 


Owners 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


(2251)SALA1HE 


1U7 3 


4*/2 41 1/, 


A. Clayton 


vV. J. Donahue 


5 


6 


2 


2229 FULL SPEED 


108 5 


21 2^ 2*4 


Doggett 


Kensico Stable 


3-5 


1-2 


out 


2350 EDNA D 


100 1 


51 51 31 


Hewitt 


Mituhell&Lamb’rt 8 


8 


3 


23U7 MISS BRAMBLE 


100 7 


]NK Ink 41 


Gardner 


H. E. Leigh 


5 


5 


7-5 


2249 FAVO 


100 4 


3*/2 3*/2 51 


Hirsch 


A. L. Appleby 


5 


6 


2 


2277 SEC OND CHANCE 


97 2 


7 7 6 


Powers 


R. Bradley 


10 


10 


4 


2346 SANDAL 


108 6 


6 6 7 


Barbee 


P.S.P.Randolph 


30 


30 


10 


2236 FLASH V 


103 8 


8 8 8 


Keefe 


0. L. Richards 


.30 


30 


10 


2251 BONNIE ELOISE 


105 9 


9 9 9 


J. Hill 


J. A. McLaughlin 20 


30 


10 






Time, 12H, 25, 37*4, 493^. 











Start good, by machine. Won cleverly. Full Speed stopp d as usual. Edna D interfered 
with or would have been closer up. Miss Bramble should do next time. 

Scratched— Yeldiz, 98: Woodbird. 96; Bird of Freedom, 97. 



2376 SE(JOND R.\CE — 1 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



Ind. Horses. 



Wt. 


St. 


/4 hi 


% Str.Fin. Jockeys 


Owners 


Op 


Cl 


PI 


89 


5 


2*/a 2 h 


24 24 lu Hewitt 


R. McBride 


6 


6 


2 


94 


2 


11 12 


1* 1*4 22 Powers 


M. ( Jancy & Co 


4 


4 


8-5 


98 


3 


41 51 


.33 310 315 O’Leary 


F, Reagan 


8-5 


8-5 


3-5 


98 


1 


31 31 


42 42^44 Gardner 


E. Lansberg 


2 


2*/* 


1 


86 


4 


5*/, 4h 


W 2 .51 51 Hirsch 


J. C. Plate &('o 


6 


6 


2 


100 6 6 6 6 6 6 Wapshire 

Time, 263^. 53*4, 1 :18M, 1 :43*/j, 
l,;)yal Exchange— The Shimp. 


B. A. Ashmeade 


30 


30 


10 



2278 ROYAL H 
2304 LAMBENT 
2278 VAN BRUNT 
6^9 ALLAN L 
1097 HONOLULU 
2230 TOKADEE 



was short of work. Royal II is improving to his early form. 
Scratched — Balmaghie, 93; Restraint. 97. 



2377 



THIRD RACE— 3-4 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 



lud. Horses. 


Wt. St. *4 


Vi 




Str.Fin. 


Jockeys 


Owners 


Op Cl 


PI 


(2230)ZANONE 


104 1 


Ink 


12 


D li*/4 Gardner 


S. Levy 


1-2 1-2 


out 


(2348) PREMIER 


97 2 


41 


42 


2*/a 25 


T. Sloan 


J. A. McLaughlin 


3 3 


out 


2230 MARSIAN 


94 3 


2/a 32 


41 36 


Hirsch 


P.S. P. Randolph 


12 15 


4 


(2282)THE DKUID 


91 4 


5 


5 


5 42 


Maher 


P. Welch 


12 15 


4 


2235 B. WASHINGTON 


92 5 


32 


2h 


3h 5 


Powers 


C, V. Havener 


10 15 


4 



Time, 25, 50. 1 :15. 

Winner— Br. g, 3, by Black Dean— Arrowgrass. 

Start poor. Won easily. Zanone was much the best. Marsian ran a fair race. 
Scratched — Bornardine, 102 



2378 



FOURTH RAtyE — 1 1-3 Miles. 3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 



Ind. Horses. 



(2252)SUE KITIIE 
2302 CyHAR.ADE 
t2347) MIRAGE 



Wt. St. ^ Y 2 U Str.Fin. Jockeys Owners 



Op Cl PI 



104 2 2V4 2V4 U/i IVi 1” O'Leary E, Steeds 1 1 out 

112 1 D/s 11 22 22 2 n Ballard Bell wood Stable 2 2 out 

105 3 3 3 3 3 3 H. Lewis G. Anderson 4 4 out 

Time, 25/s, 51^. 1 1 1 :55. 

Winner— B. f. 4, by Darebin— Kathleen. 

Start good. Won after a long drive by all three. A spectacular finish. Charade was in- 
clined to hang when called on, else he would have won. 

Scrat ched — Marshall, 104; Defender, 98; Volley, 92. 



2376 



FIFIH RACE — 5-8 Mile. 2-year-olds. Maidens. Allow’ances. 



Ind. Horses. 



2307 SUNNY SLOPE 109 6 

2281 OUR JOHNNY 112 3 

2281 ROBBIE W 112 8 

TEMPESTUOUS 112 9 

2279 ONE CH.\NCE 109 5 

2305 BK:YCLE girl 109 1 

2346 VALERIANA 109 4 

2305 MAUD ADAMS 109 2 

2301 .JOE (^UTLEi: 112 7 

2281 VINCENTIA lu9 10 



Wt. St. ^ ^ Str.Fin. Jockeys Owners 



Op CA PI 



1!4 U H H/s J. Hill JereDuun 8-5 2 4-5 

4/s 51 4/s 2 h H Lewis J. A. Sykes 5 3*4 6-5 

5Vi 3*4 31 3 nk M. Bergen Eagle Stable 6 8 3 

8 7 6 41 A. Clayton Brookdale Stable 12 5 2 

9 9 9 52 Powers R. Bradley 50 60 20 

314 3*4 21 6 Doggett J. A. Bennett 8 10 4 

6 6 7 7 Gardner H. E. Leigh 6 8 3 

24 44 51 8 Simms J. A. McLaughlin 24 2 4-5 

7 8 8 9 Bergen J. Noonan 8 15 6 

10 10 10 10 Gifford M. .7. T itzpatrick 30 40 12 



LOCHGLYN 112 11 11 11 11 11 Barbee P.'S.' P.' Raudorphi) ^ 10 

2279 CALIBEE 112 12 12 12 12 12 C. Healy Madison Stable 12 8 3 

Time, 12*4, 25*4, 50*4 •. 1 :034. 

Winner — Ch. f. by Eslier— Meta. 

Start stragging. Won driving; second and third same. ' Johnny was the best and should have 
won. Tempestuous was interfered with. A very bad bunch of horses. 

Scratched — Donny. 109. 



ST. LOUIS FORM CHART. 

ST. LOUIS, MO., July 18.— Sixty-first day. Fair Grounds Associatiou Meeting. 
W’eather clear : track fast. 



J mIges.J . A. Murphy and Jos. J. Burke. Starter. C. C. Chinn. 



2364 FIRST RACE— 1 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Wt. St. 4 4^ Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Ind. Horses. 

9-TI4 pi ('ovington E. G. Wachter 3 

2.344 ( . McDonald 124 1 23 1h ink 12 2* Gamer D A Honi^ 3 

2244 MOUNT. QUAIL 122 5 5*4 5 i 4i 4i 32 R Jones T B Watt? 4 

^ 44 4nk 51 51 430 Schaefer St. Paul Stbl 

1491 SfciljMA 121 6 6 6 6 6 5 Tlifjriitou H E Wislinrt* 

1545 CAPT PICKEREL 122 4 Ikk 23 .25 32 6 ClareCnt "'Humes 



Op Cl PI 



6 2 

5 6-5 

6 2 

3-5 3-5 out 
20 30 8 

w- rn r U i:, ^ Time, 264, 51*4, 7!lTir45*4. 30 30 8 

Winner— ( h. g. 5, by Ecuador— Eva S II. 

by machine. Won ridden out. Eau Claire ran easy for seven eighths. Charlie 
McDonald ran a fair race. First Cha nce is of no account. The weight stopped Capt. Pickerel 



SECOND RACE— 1 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 



Ind. Horses. 



2287 SC^HILLER 
(2285)PELLEAS 



104 5 
107 4 

2342 MRS BRADSHAW 97 1 
(2091)SHIN1NG BELLE 100 3 
LONG LEE 89 2 



W4. St. 4 4 4 Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 


Op Cl 


PI 


B. Schreiber 


1- 


•2 2-5 


out 


J. E. Rodegap 


2 


3 


out 


Thos. Stringer 


20 


.50 


10 


F. T. Wood 


75 


100 


20 


W. L. McDonald 


200 


200 


50 



15 11 111414 38 Wilhite 

5 5 5 5 42 Schorr 

21 2» 2 "k 41 5 Shannon 

„ Time, 25*4, 51, 1:17. 1:424. 

W inner — B. c, 3, by .St. George — Fraulein. 

Start good by machine. VVon easily. Schiller pulled up lame. Long Lee, a maiden, showed 
plenty ^effspeed^^^ Pelleas at the end. Shining Belle had the slows. Mrs. Bradshaw had 

Scratched — Laureate, 107. 



2366 THIRD RACE -4 1-3 Furlongs. 2-year-old fillies. Allowances. 



Ind. 



Horses. 



(2:308)BLlTZ’N’SSIST’Rl05 2 
(2'54)OMAH WOOD 101 1 
2308 JUANITA 10'> 3 

2283 CRALO 96 5 

2219 ALMA RUSSELL 96 6 
421 BESSIE L 101 8 

2172 MISSOURI GIRL 96 4 
SALIO 96 7 



Wt. St. 4 4 4 Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



25 23 11/2 Garner J. E. Kodegap 6-5 3-2 1-2 

14 12 23 Slaughter F. T. Wood 8-5 8-5 3-5 

45 38 3>2 Turner G. W. Scott 4 16-5 1 

5 5 414 Wilhite T. B. W’atts 30 30 10 

6 6 51 Dean L. Caton <fe Co 100 100 30 

8 7 6 Reidy G. W. Littrell 30 25 10 

34 42 7 Hampton Randolph Stable 80 80 30 

^."88 Doian E A Meyers & Co 100 100 30 

. u o. ^ Time,06, 184, 294,554. 

Winner — B. f. by Blazes — Germania. 

Start po(jr, by machine. Won galloping; second all out. Missouri Girl showed speed. Juanita 
finished strong. Th machine broke and there was a delay at the post of 35 minutes. 

Scratched— Miss Baker, 9 6; Zaraida, 96; Lilly Beatrice, 105; Augustina, 96 

23(>7 FOURTH RACE— Furkmgs. 3-year-olds and upward. TheJGolden Rod Stakes. 



4 4 3^ Str.Fin. Jockeys Owners 



Ind. Horses. Wt. St. 

(2041) NICK 105 1 

(2246) LAUREATE 105 3 

(2202) M. AY THOMPSON 94 4 

2286*AMELIA MAY 97 5 

2202 GEO. F. SMITH 99 2 

*BILLY .JORDAN 103*46 _ „ . . „ . w. ... 

r. . « , *Added starters. 'l ime, 07, 30 4 , 544, 1:20*4 
Winner — Br. h, 6, by Mortemer — Retribution. 

r, good by rnaebiue. Won easily ; second all out. May Thompson ran an improved race. 

Smith was sore and stiff. Laureate had plenty of early speed. 

Scratched— M ag net. 128; Tartarian. 102. 



Op Cl P I 

32 2* 21 114 T. Murphy Ryan & Whitten 2 2 4-5 

1*4 12 11 22 VV., Johnson Pastime Stable 2 13-5 1 

45 43 4* 32 Webster Lakeland Stable 2 3 1 

2 nk 32 31/^ 46 Slaughter W. P. Magrane 15 20 8 

51 52 51452 Garner T. Kiley 8 6 2 

6 6 6 6 Ashley W. C. Larue 60 100 30 



2368 FIFTH RA('E — 3-4 Mile. 2-year-olds. Handicap. 

Horses. 



Ind. 



AQUINAS 90 2 

2310 ZAMAR II 112 4 

2310 JACK B B 10 . 5 

2310 AGENT 102 3 

2345 LADY BRITANNIC 94 1 



Wt. St. 4 *4 4 Str.b'm. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



2 nk 21 114 Slaughter B. Schreiber 6 5*4 7-5 

1*2 13 1 2 210 Garner D. A. Honig . 9-10 4-5 out 
3 nk 3 nk 32 3 h Webster Lakeland Stable 6 8 3 

5 5 5 41 E. Cochran J. T. Stewart 2*4 3 4-5 

41 4*4 4nk 5 N. riimer G. VV. Scott 20 30 8 

w o toi l r Time, 12, 24, 484, 1:144. 

Winner— B. g, by Belvidere — Legacy. 

Start good, by raaciiiue. Won easily ; second all out. Zamar II died in front. He is a bit of 
oward and d_es not relish weight. Aquinas finished strong and is a real good colt. 

Scratch, d— Dare II. 112. 



23<>f) 



S;XTH RACE— 3 4 Mile. 3-year-olds and upward. Allowances. 



2380 



SIXTH RACE — 1 Mile. 3-year-old Maidens. Selling. 



lud. Horses. 



Wt. St. 4 4 4 Str.Fiu. Jockeys 



Owners 



Op Cl PI 



2282 FLAMES 
2306 CONNEMAUGH 
SATANEdLA 
2282 SULTAN il 
TOMBOLA 



P. S. P. Randolph 4-5 7-10 out 

” 24 2 1-2 



86 2 21 24 21 11 12 

84 1 1*4 3*4 38 32 28 

105 3 4 1*4 I142H 32 

89 4 3*4 41 42 41 42 

90 5 5 5 5 5 5 

Tim\ 27. 53*4, 

Winner— B. g. 3, by Hands Off— Fireworks. 

Start fai'. Won easily. Satanella was short. Connemaugh finished strong. 
Scratched— Rockledge. 89. 



Hirsch 
Powers F. C. O’Reiley 

St nebridgeJ. W. Wilson 
Coyle H. Coombs 

Harrison Gen, Custer 
:19. 1 :45*4. 



8 

4 

10 



LAKESIDE ENTRIES. 



Probabilities— Weather clear; track fast. 
First Race— 3-4 Mile 
3-year-olds and upw’ard. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 
2352 Lalla Roohk(3) 92 1535 Fannie Hunt(3) 92 

2329 F’nk Jdubert(3) 94 2299 Spinola (3) 96 

2295 Rosa May (4) . . . 101 2296 Eftie T (4) 101 

2212 Pinchback (3). .101 2300 Hesperia (6) ...103 

2269 Ragner (a) 103 1533 Zaldivar (a). ..103 

2178 Repeater (4) . 1(»3 2237 Billy B (4) 105 

2:KX) Victor Carl (4). .105 2049 Spendoline (a). 113 

Second Race— 1-2 Mile, 

2-year-old. Maidens. Allowances. 



Ind. Horses. 


Wgt. 


Ind. Horses. 


Wgt. 


23.53 Gertrude. .. 


.... 90 


21.56 Nannie Dunn.. 97 


2208 Brescia 


. .. . 97 


611 Calla Lilly. 


....103 


2267 Lady Juliet 


..103 


1879 Aceta 


....103 


421 Leowicka . . 


.. ..106 


2297 Alert 


....106 


2228 Fife 


.. ..106 


2267 Tidiness 


....106 


Minnesela.. 


. ... 106 







Third Race— 5 1-2 Furlongs. 
3-year-olds aud upward. Allowances. 

Ind, Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2268 Virg.Dixon(3) .. ^6 566 .Atalauta(3) 86 

2158 Miss Star (3). .. 86 2123 Gismouda(3). 86 
(’inderSal (3).. 94 2328 OraAudraine(5) 95 
(2210) Urania (4) .... 95 (2266) May Fern (5). 95 
(1793)Stowaway(6L-100 2299 Tagliona (3).... 86 

Fourth Race — 1 Mile and .50 Yards. 
3-year-olds and upward. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 
2325 Geo. B. Swift(3) 88 2296 Miss Fr’nces(3) ^ 
2327 Treachery (3) .. 96 2295 Gracie C (4) .. .101 
2:156 Alto June (6) . . . 101 2327 Onalaska (3) . . 101 

2271 Gunwad (a) 103 2352 Longdale (.5)... 103 

(2355)Dockstader (5)103 2269 Miss Clark (5). 105 



2:i29*Ashlaiid (5) ....108 2295 Fakir (a) 106 

(2l30)Sullross (a) ...116 2356 Powhatta (5L.1H 
*By Springbok. 

Filth Race- 3-4 Mile. 

3-year-olds. Selling. 

Ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt 

2329 Swamp Rose ... 9.5 2325 Serena 95 

2.3.52 Lady(.)lyde 95 (2268)Millie M 97 

2268 Minnow 97 2268 Canfield 97 

Jack Goodman .100 23.57 Judge Baker. ..100 
2237 Georgie Smith.. 100 2182 Joe Mancini .. .100 
2268 Fritzie 100 

Sixth Race— 3-4 Mile 
3-year-olds and upward. Allowances, 
ind. Horses. Wgt. Ind. Horses. Wgt. 
(2296) Martha R (3).. 92 2296 Peep o’Day 11(3)92 
2131 Cora Havill (3). 94 2354f Rubberneck (3). 97 

2299 May Rose (4).. .101 1965 Outgo (4) 103 

2300 Santa 4 )ruz(4). .103 2325 Canewood (4) ..103 

2266 Bart (4) 1(3 2299 Queen t>ess(5)..105 

2298 La (’reole (4).. .105 1624 Dr. France (4). 106 
2300 Domiuico (4). ..106 

fBy Vagabond. 



What Racint? People Need. 



The Flanders card, published nightly is cor- 
rect, and goes to the public convenience of 
printing a set of entries which is wired for the 
benefit of its patrons. 

Clohesey & Co., of 48 and 50 Wabash avenue, 
can supply bookmakers with all their [needs, 
and is a reliable and high class firm. 



Qo to Edward List, 190 South Clark 
Street for Cheap Railroad Tickets 
Everywhere. 



Ind. Hoises. 



2313 HARRY DUKE KJ4 

23V.i *SLlGO 102 

2313 JOHNNY McHALE 92 

2152 .A('E 91 

2204 HONOR 89 

*By Hanover. 

Winner — B. g, 4, by Duke 
Start go^ul by mac h inn. 



Wt. St. ^ 4 , Yz ^ Str.Fin. Jockeys 



Owners 



IKK 1*/^ 11 



T. Murphy J. H. Payne 



Op Cl Pi 



2/2 



way. McHale ran a good race. 



2kk 21 22 21*^ Schorr .1. VV. Schorr 

5 3*/2 31 /s 43 33 Dolan T. J. McHale 10 

4 5 5 :1 nk 43 Garner Jas. Murphy 2 

1 43 4*/2 5 5 Slaughter A.H &D.H. Morris 2 

Time, 11 *4, 235^, 48, 1:14. 
of Montrose— Memorial. 

Won easily ; second in a mild drive. Duke won as he pleased all the 



m 

16-5 

12 

2 */, 

2*/2 




WHEN OTHERS FAIL CONSULT 

MeTOH 8WEAKY. 

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CHICAGO'S LEADING & MOST SUCCESSFUI 

SPECSAUST 

for his many wonderful cures in all 

Nervous, Chronic & Private 
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UTo cases undertaken unless cure can be 
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WfCI I K opinion upon your case and valu- 
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. DR.F.L.SWEANY.323 State St.Cor.Congress.Chicago 




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DAILY RACING FORM. 



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BEGINS JULY 11th AND CLOSES JULY 28th 



FIVE OR MORE RACES DAILY, RAIN OR SHINE BEGINNING AT 2:15 P. M. 
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Pittsburgh & Fort Wayue Special Trains leave Dniou Depot, stopping at Archer Ave., 41st St. and Englewood, at 12 :10, 12 :25, 12 ;55, 1 :20 and 1 :35 p.m. Regular Train at 7 :30 a.m. and 

LakrrhVrrSp”c‘TTrato^^^^ VanBuren Street Depot, stopping at 22nd and 39th Sts. and Englewood, at 12 :35, l:00andl;35. Regular trains at 8:05 a.m. and 12:03 p.m. First 

train returns at 4 :35. j a o/t 

Illinois Central Express Trains leave Randolph Street Depot, stopping at VanBuren, 12th, 22d, 39th and ^d Sts., at 12:30, 1 :10 and 1 :30 p.m. 

Electric Cars connect with Alley L at 64th St. and with Illinois Central at 92d St. Round trip on all trains 25 cts. 



W. C. CREVELINQ, Secretary ADMISSION 50 CENTS. LADIES 25 CENTS. 

CONCERT BY BANKS CREGIER’S ORCHESTRA— 25 PIECES 



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Second Leather Form Book 

No. 2 of the Edition de Luxe of Daily Racing Form’s 
Charts will be out August 18. The $10 volume in 
Leather (flexible) will cover American racing from 
riarch 25 to August 15 and the $6 will contain the 
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both books will be complete and correct. Order in 
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Daily Racing Form’s' Selection.. 

The Telegraphic Service over Racing Form’s Daily Selections has been 
remodeled and in future subscribers at $4 per week, will be sent only 
a succinct telegram of some twenty words, night rate Western Union 
Message, containing the refined selections in all the races of the fol- 
lowing day. 



K EIOH’S P ORTABLE S TALLS 



OWNERS AND 
TRAIN 3RS . . 

When you ship your horses, ask 
Express Company to stall your 
car with “Leigh’s Patent Portable 
.‘'tail,’’ adjustable to any car, thus 
s-;curing absolute safety to your 
iiorsos while in transit without 
14 klitional cost to the shipper, as 
(‘.press company’s furnish them 
liHO of cost to you They don't 
.Mace the car when adjusted 
H ud can be set up in thirty minutes 
I »r any number of horses to 24 in 
(lonble door baggage car. Express 
c.Miipanies can procure stalls by 
applying to 



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Opening Saturday, June 27 

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Chicago & Northwestern Trains at 8:30 and 11:30 a. m., landing passengers at entrance. 
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Trains at same hours. 

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